books

reading through the alphabet (an intro)

I decided, arbitrarily, in October, to read through the alphabet. There is so much noise in my head that whenever any coherent thought bursts its way through, I tend to do whatever it says (see, also cat ear hair clips).

Like many attempts, however, X stumped me. I don’t have much interest in X-men and most other books starting with X seem to be about vampires in outer space. There is an Edith Wharton collection that starts with X (Xingu), so why don’t I read that? 1. I have to find a cord to connect my Kobo to the computer and I’m too lazy to do that and 2. I have to spend today finishing up Z (Zoo Station, which is really Wir Kinder vom Bahnhof Zoo and only in a newer translation is Zoo Station) and the chances of me doing that rather than pissing the day away b staring vapidly at the grey weather outside is very low. Vanishingly. Epsilon low.

Now I have to decide how to list this. All books in alphabetical order? A canonical example for each letter? Keep reading and see.

why don’t I like non-fiction?

I read a non-fiction book that didn’t involve Nazis! I feel I should give myself an award for that.

But I didn’t like reading it. Why? Why don’t I like reading non-fiction? Is it I pick non-fiction books that are, in terms of literary writing, not literary? Why am I so obsessed with plot? Why don’t I like reality even a little bit?

Why am I writing this meaningless post instead of proofing my short story collection?

I don’t know anything.

#20booksofsummer20 book #19

This book is that friend you had in high school that one day you said Seriously, dude, not everything has to be funny as he tries to make an inappropriate joke about the Holocaust and then after that, you don’t hang out that much anymore and you know what, you don’t even mind that much.

***

I don’t understand being in love with someone based solely on their looks. I guess, since I am not beautiful, it’s an alien concept to me. But it’s also boring. In the back pages, in the notes by the author section to make the book book-clubbable, author goes on about how he’s subverting tropes and the girls in the book have depth. Firstly, he describes them as girls. Then what is their depth? We know that one is poor, one is the daughter of a sleazy lawyer, one is fat. That’s not depth. Depth is what is your favourite piece of classical music and why? How much one weighs hardly counts as depth.

***

This is a book for geeky boys who wanted hot girls.

I am a geeky girl.

I never had much interest in hot girls.

Ergo….

#20booksofsummer20 book #17

Well, that was grim.

And the last Canadian novel I read was grim too.

I thought it would be funny. The blurbs on the front said it would be funny. Maybe it is for those who don’t view their bodies as an insidious enemy, whose goal, as far as they can tell, is type 2 diabetes and heart disease, who didn’t have relatives growing up taking them to task for how big they were, who didn’t, when they lost a bunch of weight in their last year of high school through a combination of not eating and an untreated lung infection, feel that their mothers loved them more now that there was less to love, maybe for people like that, this book was funny.

I am fat. I have a daughter, and with her I use the word fat not as an insult but just as a word, and tell her again and again that size means nothing because good people come in all shapes and sizes, but she is not fat, and secretly (and now now so secretly because here I am typing it aloud) I think her life will be easier because she is thin. I think specific slices of my life would be easier if I lost weight too.

I write grim too. But after the last list of grim novels I’ve been reading, I don’t know whether I can handle any more grim at all.

#20booksofsummer20 book #12, 13, 14, 15

I was away last week, which meant more reading time.

Writing time … not so much.

I swear my ninth grade English teacher read us a story by Beth Goobie way back in 1994. I have no proof of this though. Once, years later, I contacted said English teacher about another story she read to us (takes place I think in Poland, on a shetl, and a man lies down on railroad tracks because a girl won’t date him) and she said I was misremembering, that never happened, and she had no memory of reading us that story. So maybe she didn’t read us also a Beth Goobie story. I don’t know. My memory is lost.

#20booksofsummer20 book #11 + extra whining

The epub of this and The Rotter’s Club, which I paid $14 for each, were both riddled with OCR errors (double f’s missing especially) and improper page breaking and no section breaks and I love these books and why would you put some of my favourite books in such shoddy packaging? I don’t care if the person to whom I recommended them thought they were trash; they didn’t deserve such treatment by kobo.

I got very little sleep last night. I struggle with my work. I am trying to clean as well. Nothing, however, is done and I am on the verge of exhausted tears.